HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1886-07-23, Page 612'DT1 &V'JUL'S, 28, 1880. 'proverb than the one above emoted; or melt
the ' nr 'more at
that tyro t mere permanent Misohle
armee done
hie and bout ade ate( e-
hapeverish
.. ' , . , ' •
4
- A much better way', au d one that can he'
followed 'without the les% of a eropeiseto
rwheat after some •spring crop or after a elover-hay :crop or pasture., In. no -case
5401 the plbwiag be done sooner' than the
Sett :of August and if o. pastere is te be
heed, it should he prevtously looked to that
, 5lopeiveads be Sewij to seed beford .Rtow-
mg. The grolind Iiidificl be ploWed billy
• .once, but be well plowed; Sum 'Itarrowee,
rolled and cultivated until packed 110Xd and
solid below and the surface mellowed, but
only a ecitPle Pe inches deep.: 04 course, by
thie method the loss by the evaporation or
•by Iffi Wag by rains is reduced to the low-.
-eat runit's and the' seedebed is. -prepared. just•
as wheat or other winter grain requires...
hard add solid, beiew and friable on the top-.-
reducing the disturbauce by frosts to the
`lowest amount. Now, if the value of'the
clover hay or grairi taken Of, or of'the pas.
tura be added, in. the shape of some kind.cf
Manure or fertilizer, a" better crop will be
produced than is Itssiblein the old way,
arid thole:lid, easteed of being robbed, will
be made the eicher.
a.
•
• The Icarineree Vthlie
Tbe 'world over the farmer'e molly dee
mem the best of •e,vezythinfi to 'sato 4ra!
rich, greas7 and sweet mime; thategile ,T114
their teeth and make tlierikekinnyttad nys. ,
-peptic,- and consurifira e profits frotte•
their farm bes:dee. Not by any means. But
a varied diet of fruits, grains, vegetables,
fish, Poultry, milk, eggs sad. cream. That,
with scieutilic farming, the Means for ,
echooling and getting on in the woeld thht
. • there are in this country will produce from s
_ ur rural population, in time, the finest rem's,
•of Poen. and womentheWerld ha's *yet eeen.
it ought to be so, and is boundto be, if the
American farmer attends to his busbies.
„ The mostserapus laelc *0 the present
variety of rural get is that of fresh fish. It
is safe to my there are famine, of even well -
to - d do farmer who do not have a meal ef
(Mee a Year. Salt inaiskerel and•codfish are
the best they can do in the • fish line, '.:This 4
eountty le very b'ig, and Many of 'the' best
farms in it am far removed from the sea-
shores and large wateacourses. It is Much
, ettibeeregreeted, Ivies/11s ansimplariant. Cone\
Stituent of a healthful' diet,"
• The only way to remedy- the defect is for
every fameto have his ovrn fish Pond, It
ought to be as Much a matter of eouree as
the poultry yard ot pig pen.
Awl every farmer eon liate a ilsh. 'pond•,
Biseicultute has now reaolied such a OW
nt this couetry. that. .tlite. isteeatlypeeeible,
- The lish above all for the father td culti-
vate is the Gernoan carp. • Right bete itmay
, remarked: that young cerp are distributed
free by the United Stites governMent. The
wity_tegist them is this: Write to ProfessorS. F. Baird, 13nited Stat ee fish Ve-m-nithideti• ;"
Washington, D. Cs, for a blank application.
Fill it oot as required, geryeur Uotted
States senator or represeeetative to indorse
it, and • thou return it to Profeseer Bedr,c1.
You tent get the earn at the proper season
for distribtitieh ,
s.
•
• f'"s
.•
4.%.• .r.
4fc:,,V1*‘,.1-. •
•
q1/01119P n" t /0,1,2
• Si
.z -vi•
4":41. •
• carte, rethe •.•
The ycruns; fish will be distributed trent
October to April. • Have :Slime pond all ready
to pet ehero into. Veryexact directfons for -
• building. a pond heva, leen given byCharlee
Theee havebeen published by•the United States government for gratuitoue
distribution. It isn't &bad sort of govern-
ment :after hll. The". ehamphlet -should be
—"'"''','";gZrtiulrfttattStryhtrdr'ttirO—intaifas
gonad into carp culture, • For: this painphlet
write to Professor.S. F. David, Washingtoo,
15. Cs Ask him to send you "Carp end Carp•
Ponds," by Charles W. .8n:flay. The Brats
'part.of thcS panophletas in the form of goes-
•' .tion and answer. • It atthwertill8 miestionss
• that have been put t� the fish commission
• about a million times • each; mere Or less..
• They containall-that.-it-is ncessitry•te know
about raising carp.. • .
The boys eif the farm • can itait a , pond,
when it is not cOuvenient for the master:
himself to do se? • They.would like no bet- •
ter fun. ' The lessons they will learn in nth-
• • cluttrice, and the ways ,of water and its hi-
• habitants will be worth -Mom than even the /
food value of the fish.themselves:•'
An ide pond Will do very well to raise the
fish in; or a riond.can,be made. at a, spring, •
or a depreeslen in a meadow--ttnyeplaCe
where there is a body etif water that Will not
stagnate. If, in a Meadow ond, the drains
age df the surrounding.serface eats run in,
• .all the hotter.. . Itie violent inetterehat will
be food bar the 'Freshets.' must hp
guarded ageinst. • !Ina Carp likes still,avarmi
muddy swater.e It is a lazy, quiet fith. . The
• penclemay be very thallows except in one or
• two pliices. There it shottce ba as inuch as
•• five feat deep, for.tioe Ashes' winter quarters;
They_burrow fn the soet Mud in winter,. •
Vermin on Turkeys.
poutkarxt Goltivator0,
Deetrby all the vermin on the necitlier, or
the young will soon look sleepy, dwindle
and die. There ifu•e two kinds of lice that
trouble turkeys; one is long and black,
found useaily on the wingmed tail feathers;
tee other: is 001110WIlati Ike -a bed bug. if
the mother is thoroughly waehetiewith warm
. water -and carhdlio map on a brlitht, warm'
morning, she will be relieved and the lice
• destroyed. . Iterosone will kill the lice and
the turkeys, too; Turkeys don't ecit "much
the first few days after they are
itatchel. 'never • feed-withraw dough;
leaked bread, made of unsifted„ coro meal,
crumbled fine and moistened with clabber or
butter milk, is the be food youseaa eye,
-Cot up cabbage leaves very fine and dr,op to
The. little ones; don't •cut many tit a tune
until they teem to eat them. They like
everything frmh; feed often and just a little
until they learn to. eat, then three times a r
day *a moth bread and greenssaa they wilj
eat. • It is astonishing. to see the quantity of
greens they will Consume. We have real-
• feed from $20 to $80 a year from the sale of
turkeys, besides keeping plenty for family
use. We found it more profitable to dress
beforemarketing than to sell on feta.
• . •Witte; curie in Sin stroke. .
• As there have Wen roany cases of 81111
/trek° this summer, I will ••tell you what/
know about one that was cured with, water.
A man wasprostrated fn it tioldse :'I'he -mese
• carried hint to a shale tree, and gm of them
• Perim rine:gag and Said: "come quick, the
man is dyhog." As we could not get a "
elector to_timei to seyelira, I got a handful
of Mtilredriiiii imekets.el. water and ran
to him. I wet the towels and laid' one on his
heed; one on his breast, one on eech wrist
-andesariseenk eitchsanklesesTheaawe poured, -
fresh water on the, towels continually three.
quarters of ahhour, and.' hethen began to '
breathe -freely. I thou toed the. men to rub
him until his skin was red, and that :would
• keep loiya from taking a chill.. They did see,
andin an hour and a half he was able to
ride homeeinea.seagonef-The .rnanele -Gered
Marioutti his friend told. hint whit we hid
done for hint. ue tci me, "Yon tasea
saved me from, dying."' '
a.I.S-1Y4,-" AttetrA •
New Richmond, O.
• To Get Rid of the Wheat Weevil. '
Inural New Yorker.] .„: '
• The true weevil that infests granaries -and
•Wheat bins can 03, entirely killed by the use
•of bisulphide of carbon, if the granary and'
.biies can. be shut up air tights. When the
granary has ben Made, tight, be pasting
.. paper �r cloth ever every crack er opening,
Atiere should be placed on the grain a dish
conteining a quentitv-more or less accord-
ing to: the size of the bin or :room. The
liquid is -eery volatile, end, being heavier
then the air; it will settle to the. bottoni of
• every grain package, and will, kill every
weevil. Care sheuld be taken in ing it, as
it is both poisonous and. highly in aremable.
By opening the doors and windows of the,.
graeary, the whole tiin pass off without in-::
• 3uring the grain, •. The same treatment will
• Irill weevils in peas, or moths among cletbi ng
nowee ogoef peaseoelaisiatege____
The Seekel pear originated:Min. Phila-
delphia, • befere .the tevolirtion. A' noted
sportsmen Imown as "Dutch Job" geed to .
bring hoino every fell some 1„nt da-
l4ious
'peara, declining' •• to tell catybody
• where. be proeurea thein. About that period
the London Land comnaby, which mstied
some lend beloty the city, made a sale, and
"Putch Jacob"- purchased :the , tot upon
• which his pear tree stood.. It ofrwards
became the property et Mr. Seekel, and AP
he permitted -uurseeymen to take grae,
and' buds from trees, they gave the fruit his;
• GERMAN CARP. •
The carp belongs to the gold fish family,
- A writer in The Southern Cultivator, who •
has :had experience this line, says he
knows qf no 'invostinent that will giro: a
better return. He put sixtysthree, ash in .
a small pond in 1883, •A year latet,he put
them into a larger pond. three-quarters Of an •
sate in size, and found forteeseven Mistime
fish. 'Mat spring they spawned. the
• fall the. writer. dreve ilia water off, and
found not less than 50epoo lifely Bahr: -
three to nine inches* long. He says that
with good care an are pond will raise 2,000
to 4,000 fine ,lislia-year. They should not
be loft to themselves altogether, but eleatild
be fed, Wm plea end chiekens. Like florin, ,
• too, they etfe be fridlaq: perfeelly mane
at feeding Cm They become ttline
time that they 'can even be gailletwith the
'hand. What fun it will be.to the fitetn boys
and girls to feed and teine them!
When "f hey grow to fifty 'and .
eevee', . poiind They are ,good eating
at yeers old. In the old royal' palate. at
Fontainebleau, Franca, there is a Carp that
is said te be BOO years of ,age., The old fel-
• /ow is blind as a bet, but stilivery lively at'
i•eedifig three lIe has lived longer than any
government has been able to do in France
for a good while. e
Tho writer above'. itilintionee sells Ws
young Carp to people fa his locality foe
stocking ponds of their OWEI. • The fish he
bas can be caught readily with hook and
ho finde, although tarp generally care
mot be. Ile feCils tile fishes on bread, dougli,
boiled potatoee, eabbage, green corn tub
•teem the tots and ;vain of all kinds, The
' 'season for the carp to mine 11p0a tho table
is ()doh& •te May. This: is just vilest freah
!food is scarcest. The governmeht pamphlet
'gives picture.% of the veriotts processes tes.
qubsed teteiteueting c.arp portet---"'—
Summer Fat towing,
aturid Now Yorket.]
Suintner fallowing is one of 'the des*
"ruts" aloug will& our lathers, with a soil
made tie "rich as mud" by egos' of decayina
..vegetetien,and...the...disintegration.•eferecits.,
tielt the mineral eletriente Of plant
growth, so easily slid, and ttralliCh we
have persistently stitek, • But tbete never
VAS. a greater fallacy Or a More misleading
s
Butter. mut Cream. • •
There are 653 hotter and cream factories
in Iowa, 497 in Illiiioth, 130 irtWiseensin, 100
in Kansas, TOO in. Minnesota, 61in Missouri,
'• 50 in Tndiana, and 40 in Nebraska -.-.a total
of 1,785 in eight states, The value of the
dairy products of Iowa 'alone in 11184 Was
$50,000,000. and that of the 'Crafted 'States'
was soe,o0o,oeo.. The iralue the rielleh•
cows of the United States is 'paP at $700,-
000,000 in exeeze of the entire capital stock.
of all the national banks and trust companies
cif the country, , •
Znaanalty of an Oetaatal Smuggler.
['New 'Yorlc thrn.1,
Of • smu rs, " remartmel the clip-
ctor, hrecoMmend me le,
t re ,
, e
the t. hin)gs
brairta„ and eriginality than', any her
smugglers our times over. A few months
ago a tea packet came in and I was as-
signed to it Well, a friend of niine -a
•tend,' as they gall tem -gave me a tip
•that them was opium paste on beard,
which the sailors were going -to smuggle
ashore, ;You see opium paste pays a duty
of $10 asneund; I was on the beat the -•
moment she touched the pier, and exam.
Ined every sailor that went off. I hadn't
been aboard a very Jong time when a
Chinese grocer peddler came dowale the
wharf, kie had a big open basket on hie
arra, in which there was green stuff and
cans of tomatoes and such like.
I didn't sus ect hint, but tobe doubly
sure I walked with hien to this forecastle, •,
Where he commenced to peddle cr hia
truck. He wild the vegetables and.
Counted the money carefully he got for
them. Then he sold the cans of tomatoes
• for a Outer apiece. I thought ha was
rubbing it in, so I told one cif 'em on the
quiet they weren't evorth:.inore than a,
' Ione -The eext moinetit-' the Inv was.
filue. They jumped up, .fired the cans
into the basket, shook their •fists undere
ehisaneeee and- waatedi their money -back.
• He Wouldn't give its .and they went for ,
He was making a good tight when
one of there drcia, a kedie. I bad a heavy
cane inane: haled, and knocked the knife
out of the fellew's band and made the
peddler go up the .1e'dder and. MX this
beat lie thanked me and 'went away
talking Chinese, and, as 1 impposed„ curs. •
Ing -the ' - -
"A little while after the sailors came up
and wanted to go ashore. I searched
every- -one- ofeithem -and found -nothiag: •
They hadn't been gone more than half an
• hour when the peddler come back. His
eyes were black, and his loose and mouth'
bloody and swollen. He said: "Police-
man, dara lobbie stealee foh, dive can to.
mato. You h,elpe gettie back and takee
• bad mut° statioo louse," I felt sorry
for the poor devil, and told bim we'd go -
and search the forma -We for hisPrepertY•
We looked arourideave or ten minutes,
and were about to,give it up as a bad job,
• when he founcIthem hidden away behind
• Mine old sail-eh:db. e popped them in
his basket; shook bands, and thanked me*
.a dozen times; gave me a handfol of good
cigars, and them went away, Do you
knows -on acceunt of the licking he bad
• got, I never dropped to his 'raeket at all?
It ,was a' .put-up jb. • He brought on
board real cans ot tomatoesThe took away
tomato cans filled with epium pasta -The
• sailors 'were in with' him, and had puthe
teal ones-iu their ehests, and had replaced
• thein with the 'smug.ted stuff. There
-must havebeen thirty•five pounds, which
• meant e clear profit of $350:
1A Dow Outrage Is, Mors, u.
THE.
ISISICenteaBLIS RAC* ItY Patlell A.
SPORTISIO,arAv wOr411094
- ' % ..• '1, ;1 '-* .1' •
C Tahnng about ilneet'Svagifts,' said
e own:U.0g Man the other night. • 'I
shall never forget the time 1 won $1,000
on a fast hog, Rave I. ever turd yea
tbe sta1,1' .
His auditors shook their beads, and
asked 011ie story; ' which' be told as
follows i--' It was in the summer •of
1878, if 1 recolleot rightly. 1 bad been
playing a steep game in Chicago that
winter and spring, and when ,Inne came
my net-overefrong- system Nvas pretty -
neatly Woken down. Actin," on the
advice of a medical friend, 1 tool ajount
to a little country. town in lovas-hoping
that a month's acijourn might brace me
for the fall and winter campaign. But
to tell you about the race. The town
had a pfetty good course, and some of
-the boys there Owned SQMO really getki
f flyers, Of Which they were very proud.
One of them, whose . name I needn't
tu,e-ntionipoSsetiSed a mare upon whose
fleetness hii particularly'prided himself,
Talking with him in, a, bantering way
one day,,I offered to prcaluce a hog that.
•could beat we pairnqin a 300 yard run-
ning -race.' ••
. He became angry when 1 insisted up,
on the matter. 6 Ill iii111 You whaP I'll,
de,' I; said to him joebsely ; 'I'll bet yen
any' money that -ran 'min name: that Tar
pig can win the race. Do ion lake Ind
The boys standing around grew inter-
ested rind commenced to press around.
The o,Oier man, whose face by that time
was livid with rage, roa d, '1,11 -bet
you $1,000. • . • .
' This rather staggered t eristreltrI
had the Mangy, ' I wasn's tO be bluffed.
. 1 put it up. ' The articles of agreement
were quickly drawn up and signed.
'Well, io out a king story short,I got
hold of--one-of, those long, lank, hungry
scrub porkers and pub him, at cnee into
training; . My Method was to feed him
a bushel of Corn once •-a day. The pig
would -he stationed at one end„ of a ,
st•taight 300 yard laild; and over the,
line at the other end the corn would be
dumped upon a given signal. The mo-
ment the •eorrr was dumped tho pig was
•. • freed, and away he Sent scoot -for the
mile ramify Detective. •Other end. This kind of •prat:doe was
[Long Brangli Cor. Chicago Tribune.] • kept up felt a month, and at the end of
The fashion of lugging 'round se many• •
-14PleaM...dxesst4 Mtd-T•ablableloizeis-has--- this time the •hungry hozlenlimeke„
given rise -to a new, species of servant --the distance in a way that vronIcl put
the fainily deteCtive. There are three der ,Matitl S. to shame; --
•
tectives now livipg in the same hotel, each • rfle day of the loge "%came,•and &veil
engaged in the service of a woman of i
y.
man, . -Woman and child:for miles aroma
was on hand to witness it. Tbe race
Was rum en a 'bees "o ver groundTageord::
ing to agreement. The porcine racer'
was more than usually. hungry thatilayt.
Ile bacPbeecitne-so-RectisromecI-to-fititli
kis half bushel of corn at the other end
el the. lane, that when tio. was released
Mion the word; he shot off like a
flash, . He .ditited under the horse's legs".
and before that anireal, and his ricler.
cotild• ' recover :tiletniel'vei,--..was at tile
other end. He didn't get his eorn,but
got the $1,000. 1 left town.the. next
wealth and show. . One of them I happen
to knoW, He had a good business in
NeweToeke,htetbe tellame thatthe wages'
offered him by his present employer -was
theient to warant hiarabandoning it
for'the.siimmer and looking after, herand
her ossessions. - He receiv
...month nt est es hae his expenses .mpaid.
He always stays at the best hotels, for
it is neceisary that he should be close to '
• his charge, and besides he would net per:
mit himself to be treated as a menial.He
• follows her like a discreet shadow -
granting' that a shadow cold be discreet
• .liatigs round a neighboring post when
she Aire herself or the piazza, arid ac-
corepanies her to 'entertainments. It was
at the big ball that I stumbled across him..
in all the possible glory of.perfect even-
ing dress. He kept close to hie' lady, who
evas blazing with diamonds, but he never
presumed to speak to her.. A fine 'gem
sparkled on his own. chest, His lady had
• lent it to him, he explained, to complete
his appearance. • • . - •
•After the ball he aceompanied his em-
ployer to her apartments, and received •
tato his care the. *WOW worth of gents'
with which she had been dazzling the
compaby. He kept the 'ewels safe by •
wearing Olini in aleather belt roiled his
sevaist,und-lhey never. leave :hie bodv-
eept to, go'apoilthaPOdeji of his gracious ,
loess. ; goes heavily armecle alweys,..
seldom•leaves the hotel day. or uight.ex-
cept upon . and never :allows• .
himself to touch.' iiiiiixicatits. He has so
far this summer been in the White moun-
tales,. at Richfield Springs, and;sierra.
• gensett flea Early in August he 'expects
. to go to fiarittoga, randfrom there to l3ar
• Harbor. •.Altogether his lot is not an un,
happy one.
Repelling ,Triumpus Over Orlats.
(Boston advertiser.)
'-ftrireirmall an -Spiny of laBiElan gen-
e. • r
tletnen, some of whom never before laid
met each other, the host is suddenly
*upon by one of his guests, in a volm.dis•
tinctly audible throughout the reels], Jo
give his opinion of "Pen -elope" in
Howells' story. Query: Ought the blunder
to be politely ignored, nohtely Corrected,
or openly -enjoyed as •though. purposely
made'?
The Case stated is a real one.' The 'host
whiewite' pot in this • distressing position
ie a' successful author and a polished
gentleman. When the dreadful question
was ut •to hint he w s the bravest person
't 11
p 31 p
• . . •, io the company, and answered. • without
----e---Things to Do and to Knowthe.quivereof an eyelash, his kindness of
• Iteil clover is a biennial largely; and itlost heart and the perfectionof his breeding
•a its roots die the second winter. . So far controlling him that be Carefully
' hWiaiers" mod other.Velenin in cisterne e avoided the use of the mispronounced
may be destroyed by eel:dug minnows
.word lest he might seem willing further
„k
to disgrace a guest temporarily under his "
therein. ' • 4" • ivetection, Trying as the elnbatfites-
• ein Washington territory there is a, kind of. meat Wa3, it lasted hilt fot a le* moments*,
cedar tree which grorfs MO feet high, arid isfor the hearty taug•h of the culprit an"
• sornotirriaa'fltteell feet in diailletei'' 1 the wife of the hoet_relieved the strain
s
'In the northwest farmers Mod fruit grow
ers aro llear ejr.periMeating . With Russian
plums. :i` I I ethers seem to winter -kill.
and made -way for the explobation that
they- tsvo had colospired to play, a trick
izpn the gifted author. •
• itagwed,i can he ;rimed to a good account
as a giten crop by breakingthe ground c,alifortlites veicanle EruptiOn.
. •
early iiiSeptember when the ragsmed is in (Chicago
• bloom -'-. The mat rodent volcanic efuptiole' in
• the nited States •i•Vas that which half
Coonnon Mrd term may be used to fill ajo
eeitelts in the floor or the crevices between it tilled Feather lake, nerthern California,
In or about the year 1850. This locality"
and the base board, No bisects will vett-
. tare to push through it,
' Peter Henderson says that the flavor and
crispness of all celeries will be hicreased
they are soaked in ice.cold water for a short
time teeter° setving on the table.
The math has, the most abundant fruit
crop this year that it has knoWie itt many 0
season, It would be a good locality for
evaporators and canning' establishments.
'It is claimed that a create separator even
ono farm • where the ordinary tiutnter of
cows are kept, will make inereesemough ire
therecelpts in one year to„pay for the 'whole
.eXpensa of better Making. ' •
ik
.litOrass Les the'
grain eolor end ),• efally
' the ila,voe to butter id Jade and
the tow will give a moon better mess. 1 it
it ton will feed her three or four pounds of
•everh-metilUachelervileikeeler is ear' pastirm-sEthe hair prevent/ the stamps front stick.
This is now tho.prectice of the best rwily. ing thereafter.
mea in the ceuntrys .
• has Iately been visited by the eminent'
plutodist, C. h. Dutton, -who says that the
lava sheet poured out Was over 100 feet
thick, and covers a space about lx3 miles
hi extent, in the center of which a cinder
cone 600 feet high covers the mist, The,
lava sheet is rough and jagged le the eXe
trenle, he says, but ShoWs as yet no tram
of weathering, For a space of 400 to 50Q
rt.& from the gone the trees were all
tilled. . •
,
To. Keup keittaga Stamps,
IChIcaaO ?bassi
To keep postato stamps in the pocket
'or memorandum.book without sticking,
• a New Orleans postralice dolt advises
people to rub the inueilageretius side On
the Itaitelega OD three times. The oli of
••-• , ,
F.AMILY oftpoERs.
I:IAVt A SPLENDia A.SSORTIVIENT OF
CROCKERY AND GLASSWARE.
p.A.laaemme,
avrtiTozr.
CASH FQR EGGS
1••
Having leased the premises nnw beetipied by us, for another term of 7 years, we are
Prepared to givaehe HEST BARG:AINS possible, We have on hand a large and well
•• selected stock a
GROCERIES, CANNED GOODS, EXTR.A.CTS;
. FRUITS and SPICES. .
UTABEANTED.,Ptins, NoTnIBM BETTER IN 'TIEN BLANKET. • USO 4, -
BLACKING, BROOMS, BRUSHE,S, BASIcETS, CpNygOTtor-
.. ERY CROCICERY AND GLASSWARE.
We have the largest stockin 'towns -Combine quality- with price, r mod' we cannot be
s
A. ANGUS, CLINTON.
Great
Inducement
•
•
•
•
Pliaving honght J-.'Tuthill's Stock of
CHINA, .anocirEBT. CII.LAS ,ABIG
At tt discount,.Will sell at Wholesale Prices -until all is cleansed ant. -
f a- FINE. ASSOAT:MENT Or J. milli's, or =cm:10 ,
FINE'TOILET SOAP: •
•
-- •
FLEESHM & CO'S YEA_ST, .Tormo,rly by Tuthill &Cm alWaya on han
•
JOHN: (-711-171V ' GROCER (*TNT 0111:.
• •
• •
• •
•
NIVREFRESIINIENT ROOMS, CLINTON
A N D ER S ON, Proprietor
Ice Cream. fiioda Water, etc.
ifte.S.ANDEILSOIT, NEXT GRAND UNION CLINTON
A Portland telegram sayag.k.--Informa-
don eras received hero thieaternoon of
O fatal accident to, _.Forepangh'S„cireue
•train on the keine Central Railway, at.•
Vasselhoro, abOut ,50 berth Of,
here.. ' The. storm lieving interfered
with' the wires *dealers are uleagro;
The train, consisting of twenty ears, .
• was:.cri route to this city 4 and Was',.'ruit
ning,at as, rate Of speed, Avlien four'
jiimped the track and plunged
down the fifty fei3t etribankrnent toward
the Kennebee-River. Thri3e of the oats
nOntained aniMals and one :or -the pas,
senger Caboose containing a number Of
employees. The cat's felled over and
over'srsi teral timesi. being smashed to
pieces. Twenty,five valintble: • trick
borgeS. were outrigllt, and a noni-
ber-othera-badly tnjtirisd,isb..na-pt_w_hjgk.
will have to . be killed; The Caboose
wria occupied shy . ten men, several of
whom iisoaped by jumping when the ear,
left the track.' .They were saa,•ed-frern
injury by tbe soft earth.' „othera
were carried down the bank and caught
in . the wreck. . Their companions ex-
• tricated-several of these, wbo were bad-
ly if not fatally wounded.
..•
.L BENNETT,
PUBERAL .:BIRECTOR
• . .
A l'arlee stock of. First -Class OAS.
NETS mad COFFINS, *SHROUDS*
&a:, always on hand;
EGVItIAN EMBALiIINO-
FLUID used in elle:tees.
•
ALBERT STREET, NEXT
HARLAND BROS.
-• Iteeldenee OrAnste Ste near the
aletheeiat Church, Clinton
• 00
P
volt THE PEOPLE.
cheap ALT,' Cheap CROCERIES and.
" Cheap PROVISIOZTE.
-Haying-a-large •s.E.Q61t. Ofthe Salt-tin-luuia,
lowest, prices ever offered in Canton, as the Salt Works will be sold when arratige-
ments aro completeil. Will buy anti sell TIftiOTIIY and qt,ovElt. A lot -of
SALT SACIcS and GRAIN for - • • e•
' SIN. LARGE BARS OV I', SOAP FORONE DOLLAI:4-•
atcirltN birG•AltItit. Or:ANTON-
•
•
CD
WE ARE NOW OPENING ONE OF THE LAItOEST .vrocio. OF
BOOTS andjsHoEg ,at Rein4kably Lbw Prices.
ARNESS. TEAM HARNESS $4.
. SINGLE HARNESS $10..
. _
. •
BABY OARIVIAGES just strived,' latest Styles, very Chea,.
TitUNICS,SL VALISES bY thelundred,-Cloap•
1.110 land PINE and CEDAR summxigs atZ,owest.PrieeS.
Clinfoil.
We have secured'20 half chests of very fine Mk YOUNG HYSON TEA.
whioli wo will sell for a month at 413ets, by the nib. caddie. This
• is the best value ever cared in this eonnty. Don't •
fail to go a caddie before it is all -sold.,
We havo.opened a full stock of
New Valentia Raisins Extra Selected Valenti&
Raisins, Black Basket Ratios, Seed1es0
t'
Raisins, Sultana Raisins.
NEW CURRANTS, NEW SHELLED ALMONDS, NEW LEMON,
ORANGE AND CITBON PEEL. 21hs. GOOD MIXED CANDY
FOB 25ars, Coll and,Inspeet our Sleek,
os. Cooper Son,
• elAjaf.hrl'ON.,
a,